Reckitt Benckiser to Buy Mead Johnson for $16.6 Billion -- 4th Update
10 Février 2017 - 2:22PM
Dow Jones News
By Saabira Chaudhuri
LONDON-- Reckitt Benckiser Group PLC on Friday said it agreed to
buy baby-food maker Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. for $16.6 billion, a
deal that will almost double the size of the British company's
consumer-health business and help it push deeper into emerging
markets.
The U.K. company, which owns Durex condoms and Scholl footcare,
earlier this month disclosed that it was in talks with Mead after
The Wall Street Journal reported on the potential deal. It will pay
$90 a share in cash for the Glenview, Ill.-based company, which
makes a range of nutritional products including Enfamil infant
formula and the Sustagen milk supplement for children.
Including debt, the deal is valued at $17.9 billion.
The acquisition caps a yearslong search by Chief Executive
Rakesh Kapoor, who lost out to Bayer AG in a bidding war for Merck
& Co.'s consumer business in 2014, and has since been looking
to do a big deal.
Reckitt's growth has slowed lately, leaving the Slough,
England-based company in need of a new avenue to jump-start sales.
Friday, the company reported organic revenue growth of just 3% for
2016, its weakest in over a decade. Sales have been hit by a string
of issues lately, including a failed foot-care innovation, a
scandal in South Korea that led to its product being delisted,
disruption in India after some high value bills were taken out of
circulation.
Shares rose as much as 2% in early trading in London but lately
were down 0.8%. Reckitt on Friday forecast 2017 like-for-like
growth of 3%, which is below analyst estimates.
Mr. Kapoor said Mead Johnson fits into Reckitt's consumer-health
portfolio tangentially, just like its condom and foot-care brand
acquisitions have in the past. "Our strategy is about healthier
lives and homes," he said. "Their mission is about enabling
healthier lives from the very beginning."
He identified child nutrition as a solid opportunity, saying the
category is projected to grow sales by 3% to 5% over the medium to
long term.
Mead reported net sales of $3.7 billion in 2016, down 8%. Half
the company's sales came from Asia, with 17% coming from Latin
America and the rest from North America and Europe.
The deal will turn China into Reckitt's second-biggest market,
increasing its emerging-markets footprint by two-thirds. The deal
will also significantly boost the company's exposure to the U.S.,
which remains its No. 1 market.
However, buying Mead won't necessarily be the silver bullet
Reckitt is looking for.
Analysts have noted few obvious synergies between the two
companies beyond some distribution and head-office cuts. "This deal
does have elements of desperation about it," said Exane BNP Paribas
analyst Jeff Stent following Reckitt's initial confirmation that it
was in talks to buy Mead. "Mead has zero overlap with Reckitt."
The company said the Mead deal would boost per-share earnings by
a double-digit percentage by the third year after closing, which
Mr. Stent on Friday described as "very conservative," likely driven
by low savings and the high cost of funding the deal. Reckitt
forecast cost savings of GBP200 million ($249.9 million).
Still, investors had cheered the deal when initially announced,
which could raise Reckitt's exposure to faster growing, higher
margin categories in the long term, while Mead's struggling
performance lately made it a good time for an approach despite the
pound's decline following Brexit.
Mead's shares have fallen sharply in the past two years--as the
company grappled with sluggish sales in its key Asia market--and
were down 2.7% since the start of this year, before news of the
deal broke.
"I don't think you should read too much into the timing," Mr.
Kapoor told journalists on conference call, saying Reckitt had been
looking at Mead and other companies "for a number of years."
Reckitt on Friday reported 1% like-for-like sales growth for
2016 in Europe and North America, and said emerging markets grew by
over 8%. Net income rose 5% to GBP1.83 billion.
Robey Warshaw, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Deutsche Bank and
HSBC advised Reckitt. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley advised Mead
Johnson.
Tapan Panchal contributed to this article.
Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 10, 2017 08:07 ET (13:07 GMT)
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